iPhone 7 Vs Galaxy S7 Review
iPhone 7 Vs Galaxy S7 Review: Should You Upgrade?
Welcome to 2016’s
biggest smartphone fight. In the red corner: the Galaxy S7 - arguably one of
the best smartphones Samsung has ever released. In the blue corner: the iPhone
7 - arguably the most controversial smartphone AppleAAPL -0.87% has ever released. Both amaze and frustrate, but
which should you buy?
Note: My thanks to Three
UK and Samsung UK for long term loans for the iPhone 7 and
Galaxy S7 used in this review.
Design - Desirable Durability
Finally. After years of pleading, it seems
Apple and Samsung have finally grasped that customers want smartphones that are
as practical as they are stylish and both companies have gone big on durability
in 2016.
Galaxy S7 Vs iPhone 7 is arguably the
biggest smartphone battle of 2016. Image credit: jose
Consequently you’ll find the Galaxy S7 and
iPhone 7 each sport tough Series 7000 aluminium chassis as well as water and
dust resistance - Samsung bringing it back to the range after it bizarrely went
missing on the Galaxy S6, Apple adding it for the first time.
Differences? Technically Samsung has achieved the
slightly higher rating (IP68 vs IP67) which means it can survive submersion for
up to 30 minutes in 1.5 metres of water while the iPhone 7 also survives 30
minutes but at a depth of 1 metre. It’s not a game changing difference, but if
your phone falls into a swimming pool the Galaxy S7 has a fractionally better
chance of survival.
Both the iPhone 7 (pictured) and iPhone 7
Plus are certified to withstand full submersion in water but Samsung's Galaxy
S7 is even higher rated while keeping the headphone jack. Image credit: jose
An interesting development is Apple claimed removing
the headphone jack (more later) was necessary to achieve this rating, but
clearly Samsung found a way around this.
Durability aside, the two phones couldn’t
be more different. And here I give the edge to Samsung. The iPhone 7’s design
may be iconic, but it is looking long in the tooth. Now three generations old,
the large top and bottom bezels waste valuable space making the 4.7-inch
handset larger than it needs to be compared to the more compact 5.1-inch Galaxy
S7:
·
iPhone 7 - 138.3 x 67.1 x 7.1 mm (5.44 x 2.64 x 0.28
in) and 138 g (4.87 oz)
·
Galaxy S7: 142.4 x 69.6 x 7.9mm (5.61 x 2.74 x 0.31in)
and 152g (5.36oz)
The iPhone 7 is also more slippery to hold
and though the Galaxy S7 also lacks grip, its tapered back provides better
purchase making you less likely to drop it. If you put your phones in a case
this won’t matter, but they are tangible pros and cons out the box.
When it comes to the smaller details,
however, Apple fights back. Both phones are beautifully made, but the Galaxy
S7’s plastic home button is an oversight - especially compared to the iPhone
7’s new ‘taptic’ sapphire home button (complete with convincing vibration
feedback). The iPhone 7 also has better external audio after Apple cleverly
amplified the earpiece to create stereo audio. It doesn’t beat dual front
firing speakers, but it easily outguns the rather muffled speaker of the Galaxy
S7.
But of course it’s impossible to evaluate
iPhone 7 design without spending some time on its most controversial aspect:
the removal of the headphone jack. For some this will be a deal breaker, for
others no big deal, but what I will say is Apple’s reasons for excluding it
(water resistance, bigger battery, age) are nonsense.
The iPhone 7 has lost its headphone jack
but gained dual speakers, the Galaxy S7 has a single mono speaker but a
headphone jack. Image credit: jose
Samsung has outdone Apple on both water
resistance and battery capacity (be sure to check out the Battery Life section
further down) while age is irrelevant - the headphone jack is universal,
reliable and delivers incredible quality. But contrast the Lightning port is
proprietary (a licensing cost) and its digital audio requires a DAC integrated
into every pair of headphones to convert it into audible analogue sound waves
(another cost).
The move also condemns even the biggest
Apple fan to a life of adaptors for as long as the company refuses to update
its MacBooks to offer Lightning audio or forces them to buy wireless headphones
- another compromise in sound quality and yet another device that requires
regular charging.
One final tip: nice as it looks do
not buy the 'Jet Black' iPhone 7. It is both a fingerprint magnet and
woefully prone to scratches, and if your counterpoint is you’ll put it in a
case then you’re not seeing the jett black finish anyway.
Winner: Galaxy S7 - a closer match than
you might expect as stereo speakers and a better home button bolster the iPhone
7’s ageing looks, but Samsung has the more modern, compact, water resistant
design all while keeping the headphone jack .
Displays - Peak LCD Remains No Match For
OLED
It has been argued iPhones are “too
popular” to have OLED panels because companies cannot make enough of them to
meet Apple’s demand. On the one hand that’s a nice problem for Apple to have,
but on the other: it’s still a problem.
·
iPhone 7 - 4.7-inch LED-backlit IPS LCD, 1334 x 750
pixels (326 ppi), 65.6% screen-to-body ratio
·
Galaxy S7: 5.1-inch, 2560 x 1440 pixels, 534 pixels
per inch (ppi), Super AMOLED
Simply put the iPhone 7’s LCD is no match
for the Galaxy S7 OLED. Apple has worked wonders to get a 750p panel to look
this good (it’s 25% brighter than the iPhone 6S with excellent colour accuracy)
but OLED is the future for a reason.
The Galaxy S7 has a brighter, sharper and
more vivid display than the iPhone 7. Image credit: jose
Sit the two phones side by side and the
Galaxy S7 is an easy winner. It’s dramatically higher pixel count results in a
much crisper (and VR-ready) display while the jet blacks OLED excels at result
in a contrast ratio the iPhone 7 simply can’t match.
What the iPhone 7 does have going for it
is 3D Touch, but it still requires better integration with iOS. The ‘press and
guess’ system for discovering what is and isn’t 3D Touch enabled stops it from
being intuitive and turns usage into a memory game which many users won’t
bother playing. There’s potential here, but a generation on from its debut in
the iPhone 6S, we’re still waiting to see it.
Winner: Galaxy S7 - I still hold out faith
for 3D Touch, but the reality is Apple’s best ever LCD display is blown away by
Samsung’s class leading OLED.
Performance - Two Supercars, But One Clear
Winner
But the roles reverse when it comes to
performance because, try as Samsung might with both Qualcomm (US) and Exynos
(international) variants, Apple reigns supreme:
·
iPhone 7 - Apple A10 Fusion chipset: Quad Core 2.34
GHz CPU, six-core PowerVR GT7600 GPU, 2GB of RAM
·
Galaxy S7 (US) - Qualcomm Snapdragon 820 quad-core
chipset: Dual-core 2.15 GHz Kryo & dual-core 1.6 GHz Kryo CPUs, Mali-T880
MP12 GPU; 4GB of RAM
·
Galaxy S7 (International) - Exynos 8890 octa-core
chipset: Quad-core 2.3 GHz Mongoose and quad-core 1.6 GHz Cortex A53 CPUs,
Adreno 530 GPU, 4GB of RAM
Yes on paper the Galaxy S7 appears to post
the bigger numbers and it is extremely fast out the box, but it still has all
Samsung’s familiar failings. The result is it feels quick but rarely smooth so,
for example, webpages load quickly but then stutter when scrolling - just the
kind of flaw which is no longer acceptable after Google proved Android can
provide a super silky experience with the Pixel and Pixel XL.
Samsung's customisation of Android remains
needlessly bloated and lacks smoothness. Image credit: jose
There’s also still far too much bloat.
TouchWiz looks much better these days, but you still get about 50 pre-installed
and non-removable apps (excluding any garbage your carrier adds). I say it
every generation, but why-oh-why Samsung thinks it’s smart to offer two email
clients, two photo apps, two voice control systems, two app stores, two SMS
apps, three media players, is beyond me. Again perhaps the lean and mean Google
Pixel can scare Samsung into stepping up its game here in 2017.
By contrast the iPhone 7 remains the
smartphone industry’s speed champ. For all its failings (and more are to come)
it blows the Galaxy S7 away in terms of raw grunt (particularly when
multitasking, even with 2GB of RAM) and there’s a level of unbreakable silky
smooth responsiveness that even the Pixel is a fraction behind.
The new fixed 'taptic' iPhone 7 sapphire
home button is of higher quality and greater accuracy than the Galaxy S7's
plastic home button. Image credit: jose
The other major iPhone 7 performance win
is the fingerprint sensor. While many manufacturers have caught up to the speed
and accuracy of TouchID (notably Google and Huawei), Samsung still hasn’t
nailed it and there are too many times when the Galaxy S7 fails to read your
finger with multiple failings locking you out the phone. Samsung will likely
bring its gimmicky iris scanner to the Galaxy S8 next year but it isn’t the
answer, fitting a better fingerprint reader is.
Winner: iPhone 7 - Samsung continues to
throw good hardware at weak software. Customisation of Android is fine, but
there’s too much needless bloat and it risks not only Apple’s ongoing dominance
but now Google showing it how Android should be done.
Cameras - The Industries Best? Not anymore
For several years now Apple and Samsung
have stood out from the pack, though their roles have reversed with Samsung
overtaking Apple with the Galaxy S6 and it holds onto that lead with the Galaxy
S7.
·
iPhone 7 - Rear: 12 megapixel wide angle sensor, f/1.8
aperture, Focus Pixels, Optical Image Stabilisation, quad-LED (dual tone)
flash, 4K video recording. Front: 7MP sensor, f/2.2 aperture, 1080p recording
·
Galaxy S7 – 12 megapixel Sony IMX260 module, f/1.8
aperture (some Samsung ISOCELL variants exist), OIS, LED flash, Dual Pixels, 4K
video. Front: 5MP f/1.7 camera, 1080p video
Samsung has again bested Apple's iPhone
camera in 2016 while also making it more flush into the body of the phone. Image credit:
jose
On paper you’ll spot the two phones are
significantly closer this year than ever before. In fact Apple even has a
higher resolution front camera than Samsung, a major shift from a few years ago
when Galaxies regularly had twice the megapixels of iPhones (16 vs 8). Apple
has also finally added optical image stabilisation (OIS) to the 4.7-inch model
and introduced a much faster f/1.8 aperture, though Samsung still holds a
slight edge here offering f/1.7.
So has Apple closed the gap with the
iPhone 7? Yes, but not enough and even the dual camera iPhone 7 Plus falls
short.
Composite photo - garden path. Galaxy S7
(left) vs iPhone 7 (right) is a clear win for Samsung with a richer, more detailed
photo. Image credit: jose
Key factors are that colours in Galaxy S7
photos are notably richer with more detail - as you’ll see in both the photo of
the garden gateway and tree. The iPhone 7 also has a nasty tendency to wash out
shots making them look grey - this comes up in both very bright and very low
light shooting conditions.
A composite picture showing the iPhone 7
(left) vs iPhone 7 Plus (right) and Galaxy S7 (bottom) shows Samsung to be a
clear winner. Image credit: jose
The latter is particularly apparent in the
streetlights comparison. While the Galaxy S7 correctly produces inky blacks in
the darkest areas of the shot, the iPhone 7 and iPhone 7 Plus turn these areas
grey and are more susceptible to blowing out brighter areas of the photo.
Composite photo - in isolation the iPhone
7 (left) and iPhone 7 Plus (middle) look good, but the Galaxy S7 (right) brings
an extra level of clarity and detail in low light. Image credit: jose
Sealing its victory, the Galaxy S7 is also
significantly faster in both opening (thanks to its nifty double tap home
button shortcut) and focusing (thanks to its Focus Pixels) meaning you’re more
likely to capture spontaneous moments.
But there’s a but and it’s a big one.
The Galaxy S7 may best the iPhone 7 and
iPhone 7 Plus but it has been beaten itself to the title of 2016’s best
smartphone camera by a newcomer: Google and its first true smartphones - the Pixel and Pixel XL. In fact for all the lead Samsung holds over Apple,
Google holds an even bigger one over Samsung.
Right now the Google Pixel is clearly the
best smartphone camera with the Galaxy S7 second and the iPhone 7 falling behind.
Image credit: jose
This can be scene in the three way
comparison shot above where only the Pixel is able to balance all details of
the sky on a very hot and sunny day, while also retaining details lost by the
iPhone 7 and Galaxy S7 in the low light parts of the bushes. The Galaxy S7 is
clearly second best but stumbles in the tree line, sky and exaggerated greens
of the grass while the iPhone 7 struggles in all departments losing detail in
low and bright areas and that disappointing grey filter it brings to photos
again surfaces. It’s a similar story in low light as well:
The Google Pixel again retains better
colour and detail than its acclaimed rivals. Image credit: jose
The good news for Apple and Samsung is a
lack of brand awareness will keep the Pixel from stealing any significant
market share from the iPhone 7 and Galaxy S7 for now, but both companies will
know they have to significantly up their camera game in 2017.
So where is the win achieved? In the same
place the Galaxy S7 takes its win from the iPhone 7: pixel size. While all
three phones have 12 megapixel sensors, their pixel sizes vary significantly
(iPhone - 1.12µm, Galaxy S7 - 1.40µm, Pixel - 1.55µm) and larger pixels can
take in more light more quickly - something that’s a major advantage regardless
of the shooting conditions.
So we’ve had megapixel wars in the past
that meant nothing. A battle over pixel size (microns) would be far more
productive.
Pixel photos in sunny shooting conditions
balance colour accuracy and high and low light areas much better than the
competition. Again the iPhone 7 displays a grey filter to its images which
destroys detail. Image credit: jose
So what about video? In bright daylight
the Galaxy S7 still holds the advantage over the iPhone 7 as it again produces
richer colours and a slow mo mode that’s finally a match of Apple’s gold
standard. The Pixel is more hit and miss here with the best bright light video
(thanks to super steady image stabilisation via tying the camera to the
gyroscope rather than OIS) but this method suffers worst in very low light.
Winner: Galaxy S7 - Samsung holds onto its
smartphone lead over Apple. But in the wider context both phones have been
eclipsed by the Google Pixel and Pixel XL
Battery Life And Charging - Two Upgrades,
One Clear Winner
2016 is about Apple and Samsung fixing
their battery mistakes of 2015.
Both the Galaxy S6 (2550 mAh) and iPhone
6S (1715 mAh) foolishly shrunk their battery capacities from the Galaxy S5
(2800 mAh) and iPhone 6 (1810 mAh). Why? It was part of a ridiculous battle to
chase thinness - something the average customer couldn’t care less about at
this stage. Now things have improved:
·
Galaxy S7 - 3000 mAh
·
iPhone 7 - 1910 mAh
I actually expected more from Apple here
given the noise it made about how much internal space the headphone jack wastes
and its subsequent removal. But instead teardowns reveal Apple filled most of that space with the taptic
motor used in the new fixed home button.
So how do the duo perform? It turns out to
be an easy win for the Galaxy S7. While the iPhone 7 has fractionally
improved on the iPhone 6S, it still struggles to get through a full working
day, and you have no chance of that with heavy use - something the Galaxy S7
has next to no problem with. If you travel a lot, this could prove decisive.
The Galaxy S7 is slightly thicker than the
iPhone 7 this year to accommodate a larger battery. Image credit: jose
The other key difference is charging. The
Galaxy S7 has fast charging and wireless charging while the iPhone 7 lacks both
and highly significant, particularly if you don’t have long to top up your
phone. For example, a 15 minute charge with the Galaxy S7 results in a circa
30-35% charge (from flat) while the iPhone 7 gains about 6-8% during the same
time. Meanwhile a full charge takes about 55-65 minutes on the Galaxy S7 and
about 1 hour 50 minutes for the iPhone 7.
Combine this with the iPhone’s missing
headphone jack (meaning you can’t charge it and use wired headphones at the
same time) and there has never been a greater disparity in the ease of charging
these two phones. Apple urgently needs to address this in 2017 and fast
charging is essential, but at least the rumours are encouraging.
Winner: Galaxy S7 - there’s no competition
here. The Galaxy S7 lasts significantly longer on a charge and charges in less
than half the time.
Storage And Price - Apple Steps Up
Get your party hats on because with the
iPhone 7 Apple has finally scrapped the 16GB entry level
model. In fact Apple has doubled the storage capacity at every step creating
some monstrous options: iPhone 7 - 32GB ($649), 128GB ($749), 256GB ($849)
Compared to this the sole 32GB $699 Galaxy
S7 looks limited, but it has a trick up its sleeve: the return of expandable
storage. Samsung was pilloried for its removal in the Galaxy S6 and, like the
battery life boost, Samsung has learnt its lesson this year.
The Galaxy S7 and larger Galaxy S7 Edge
now integrate microSD slots into their sim trays which makes storage upgrades
easy and cheap. Image credit: jose
Consequently Galaxy S7 owners can spend
less upfront (and you’ll find many deals reducing the Galaxy S7’s price right
now) while adding up to 512GB of storage through microSD at any time. But it’s
not all good news since expandable storage is significantly slower than
internal storage meaning it’s only really good for photos and video.
Then again 32GB (circa 25GB user
accessible) should be enough for apps, though hardcore mobile gamers may
disagree making it baffling that Samsung doesn’t offer the Galaxy S7 in larger
sizes. Given profit margins increase as capacities increase, Samsung is only
hurting itself and its customers in not offering larger internal memory sizes.
Winner: A Draw - iPhones don’t come cheap,
but they offer huge amounts of internal storage while the flexibility of the
Galaxy S7’s expandable storage is a big draw but Samsung misses a trick by not
offering larger capacities.
Bottom Line
The iPhone 7 and Galaxy S7 show Apple and
Samsung have learnt from some mistakes, but keep on repeating others.
Samsung has learnt the most in returning
water resistance, a larger battery and expandable storage to the Galaxy S7. But
Samsung hasn’t learnt to stop filling its phones with bloatware and they still
don’t perform as smoothly as they should, especially with the Google Pixel
showing Samsung how it should be done.
The Galaxy S7 is a more balanced than the
iPhone 7 and the better buy, in my opinion. But the Google Pixel beats them
both. Image credit: jose
Similarly Apple has responded to criticism
adding water resistance to the iPhone 7, a larger battery and found a solution
to the home button weaknesses of past iPhones. But the iPhone 7 design is
ageing, battery life remains disappointing, fast charging is still inexcusably
missing, the screen resolution remains ridiculously low, the camera hasn’t
caught up to Samsung (and now the Pixel) and the headphone jack has gone for
very little benefit.
Consequently for me it is the Galaxy S7
which comes out on top in this annual battle of titans, especially as its
strengths (design, display, camera, battery life, charging) are weaknesses of
the iPhone 7. But performance/software remains Samsung’s Achilles heel and
Apple nails this every single year.
And yet the biggest smartphone story of
2016 involves neither company because, while I’d buy the Galaxy S7 over the
iPhone 7, I’d buy the Google Pixel over both. And that promises to make for a
very exciting 2017 indeed...
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